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About Nyssa gate city journal. (Nyssa, Or.) 1937-199? | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1937)
NYSSA GATE CITY JOURNAL, THURSDAY, JULY 22, 193 OWYHEE DORIS KLINGBACK Tha P.T.A. held Jointly with the OJC.K. Thursday at the Tom Lowe ranch at Mitchell Butte Hot Springs complimenting the 4-H clubs and especially honoring the delegates from the Owyhee who attended the recent 4-H summer school at Cor vallis. About 60 persons attended the meeting. After the regular routine business a program was giv en consisting of entertaining and Instructive reports of Viola Pullen and Bud Schwelzer, whose trips to Corvallis were sponsored by the Owyhee Circle, and Doris Klingback sent by the Ontario Commercial Club. Viola, who was absent gave her report by letter. Bud's report was especially interesting, this being his initial trip and he the first boy to go from the Owyhee. Doris, who had previously attended, compared this year favorably with three years ago; namely the attendance is big ger, and registration and classes run smoother. The PTA members were so grati fied over the benefits the young Professional Cards WE RECOMMEND THEM CARL H. COAD ATTORNEY-AT-LAW NYSSA OREGON DR. E. D. NORCOTT DENTIST Office Phone 35P2 X-RAY EXAMINATIONS NYSSA OREGON A. L. FLETCHER ATTORNEY-AT-LAW NYSSA OREGON TOWNSEND CLUB MEETINGS Meetings of the Townsend club are held once a month in homes of members. The Public is Invited D. R. DeGross President Mrs. A. V. Pruyn Sec. NYSSA LIBRARY OPEN SATURDAY Town Pntr nr 2:30 to 5:30 Out-ol-town Patrons 2.33 to 7:30 ALL PATRONS WEI.COME Mrs Fred Marshall. Librarian ON THE OLD JOB H. D. HOLMES TRANSFER and BAGGAGE All Kinds of Hauling in City Limits NYSSA, OREGON Phone 5 NYSSA AERIE F. O. E. NO. 2134 Meets Wednesday Night AT EAGLES HALL Visiting Eag! s Welcome BERNARD FROST, Pros. HARRY MINER, Sec. CITY TRANSFER TRANSFERRING and TRUCKING Phone 15 and Phone 28 C. KLINKENBERG ROBT. D. LYTLE ATTORNEY And COUNSELOR-AT-LAW First National Bank Building Phone 66 VALE OREGON GUARANTEE WORK WYCKOFF JEWELRY STORl: Official Time Inspector for Union Pacific ONTARIO OREGON OPTOMETRIST "See Me Fall and See Better" DR. J. A. McFALL EYESIGHT SPECIALIST ONTARIO OREGON folks gained at the school, they In structed the Ways and Means com mittee to plan ways of raising money to send delegates next year. After adjournment the guests were served tea on the lawn by the 3 et 6, a 4-H cooking club under the leadership of Mrs. Schwelzer which ended a successful and enjoy able meeting. Bud Schwelzer and Sam Pullen were Included In the 4-H club group which left Monday to visit stock farms and the experiment station in Union and Baker counties. They will be gone three days. O. R. Hite and party returned from a very successful fishing trip In Bear Valley, Idaho Tuesday even- ign. Mrs. Earl Strickland returned from the hospital to her home last Tuesday. She Is making rapid pro gress. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Clifton of Greybull, Wyoming called on the Ed Corfield family Wednesday. They are looking for new location and were favorably impressed with this country. Mr. and Mrs. Warren and three children who live in a tenant house cn the A. E. Rust place had dinner Thursday with the E. B. Smith family. L. E. Newgen finished harvesting 40 acres of winter wheat Thursday. This being the first crop the land has produced, the yield was light. Ed Foss made a trip from Salmon Idaho last week after his wife who has been visiting at the parental O. R. Hite home. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Ditty and children Tressa and Robert are making a six week motor trip to Appleton City, Mo They will return via Dillon. Montana and Yellow- stcne park. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Langton and Peggy left on a two weeks fishing trip Wednesday above Cascade. They will pack their equipment by horseback after motoring becomes impossible. Their daughter Mrs. H. R. Glover of Boise is helping at the store during their absence. L. B. Landreth started his threshing machine on the annual run Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Rusesll Talbot and Mrs. Wm. Mettlen and daughter Faye visited a cousin at Meridian Wednesday. The L. R. Kendell and Lem Wil son families' had dinner at the Ralph Gee home Sunday. O. L. Brown and three children who spent the week end at Dlttys returned to their home at La Grande Monday. Mary and Leslie Ditty followed to visit the Brown's a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Snyder and two daughters of Nebraska returned from visiting their son on a navy ship at Portland and Mrs Snyder's sister at Salem, to visit again with the Fred Boness family. Their visit was necessarily brief owing to Mr. Snyders duties as county commis sioner among which was a signing each month cf 300 old age pensions The Fred Boness have finished a basement house cn the place they purchased from Georg« Mc- Murdy last spring. Misses Dorothy McClure. Juanita Frankland an Byrd Walters were dinner guests of the Henry Slippy family last Sunday. Mr. ad Mrs. B. F F'reeman from near Nyssa were Sunday dinner guests of the Roy Rooks tools. Mesdames Bob Peroell and Frank DeBord of Payette were visitors at Klingback Thursday. The road turning at Bigelows and Joining the Tertellng camp road near Ashbys has been widened and Improved; it now runs in a straight line and make a nice drive for those desirous of visiting or sightsee.ng in that locality. The Owyhee Cooking club met with their leader Doris Klingback Wednesday. A demonstration of vanilla drop cookies was an inter esting feature. Roy Rockstool was a Vale visitor last Thursday. He is arranging to start a petition asking th at the families in his vicinity be included in the Owyhee district. The 3 et 6 cooking club met with Ileta Franklin Tuesday afternoon Mrs. Chas. Schwelzer is leader. Rex Walters is home from his work at Summet Prairie for a va cation. Mrs. Walter Fox of Lathrop. Mo. was a week end guest of the Ellis Walters family. Mr. and M rs Leo Fife and child' rrn wer? Sunday afternoon callers of the Chas. Bradleys. Walter Hite, son of Fred Hite who was working at Robinette, Or3., oiling the cable on the Ferry be came so tired he decided to drop to the water below him but found after It was too late th at the water was shallow and the fair resulted in a broken ankle and broken heel bone. He is in the Baker hospital. About thirty ladies of the Owyhee community met at the Chas. Brad' ley farm to witness the demonstra tion given in the Idaho Power All- Electric Kitchen Monday. Knot Hole News GREETINGS: Accordng to Lettuce- heuts Lou, a girl will go to great length to please a man, as a rule, but net when buying a bathing u.. -----BUILD FHA WAY----- W ill go any length to please a uetomei. W 1 have good merchan- lisc and back our products to the 'imit. -----BUILD FHA WAY----- A b: re is a fellow who doesn't give you a chance to talk about your self. -----BUILD FHA WAY----- Dear Jackson: If you had 75c In your tack pocket, and 75c in each cide pocket, what would you have? —Puzzled customer. ANSWER: I'd have on s:mebody else's pants. —Jack. -----BUILD FHA WAY----- Hubby: "You can't say I made any ncic? when I came home last night ” Wife; "No. tu t the two fellows who brought you home did." -----BUILD FHA WAY----- We have Just the grade cf shing les ycu will need for that r pair job. Ask us for an estimate cf your job -----BUILD FHA WAY----- "My son went up to Chicago 10 vears ago to make his fortune," boasted an old Scuthem hillbilly to a city visitor rec-ntly. “And what is he worth now?” "I really don't know for sartin', but the stat? of Ulnois is offering $20.000 for informary n about him,” boasted the old man. -----BUILD FHA WAY----- They locked him up in a padded cell Where he sits all day and whin's. He set some hens on chestnut burrs To hatch cut porcupines. -----BUILD FHA WAY----- This scene was in a local beauty rhep. A middle aged women was having her eyebrows plucked. "Olve them a high arch,” sh? said to the operator. "I am at the stage where that's the only thing which will make me look surprised." Jackson Lumber Company Nyssa, Oregon IlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllUII LINCOLN NEWS By MRS. ED DUPRE Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Leavitt were callers on Grandma Leavitt. Other callers over the week end were Mr. and Mrs. Van Buren and Mrs. Em ma Smith cf Ontario. Charlie Leav itt of Vale and Gecrge Rlggin. Harcld Nelson was in Nyssa two days last week helping Dale G arri son dig potatoes. Virginia DuPre of Ontario visited her parents Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. David Reese visited Mrs. R?ese’s parents Mr. and Mrs. Hawkins. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Garrison and Jo Anne were visitors at the Ed Du Pre heme Friday evening. Uncle Jo 3 Miller was a Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Markham and was a speaker at the LDS Mission Sunday School held in the Lincoln school Sunday after noon. Th3 LDS relief society of Ontario had a mothers and daughters pic nic at the Wilcox park Tuesday. Several from here enjoyed the day there. Mr. and Mrs. H. Fred Bushman from Salt Lake City visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gilchrist, Jr. and fam ily over the week end. Mr. Bushman is Mrs. Gilchrist's brother. Miss Ellen and Mabel Hopper were Sunday evening visitor» of Thelma DuPre Mr. and Mrs. Andy Andersen, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Brooks were Sunday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge Markham. Mr and Mrs Franklin Peterson and family of Payette and Mrs. Ethel Davis of Fruitland spent Sun day evening a t the Robert Gilchrist home. Thè Whit Redsull family has been ill with the summer flu. LOWER BIG BEND cough. She is now fully recovered. The PTA held its regular meet ing at the school house Wednesday evening. Wm. Teter was appointed to buy a range for the kitchen the PTA are arranging in the basement. Mrs. Harry Russell was appointed to g :t the room in order. The next regular meeting will be August 11. Chas. Marshall gave a talk on her experience in a Texas church. A roundtable discussion was held on "Child Welfare." Hazel D. Gild a gave a reading "Souso Goes Sissy.” Adjourning prayer was by Mrs. Richardson of Ontario. Those attending from Nyssa r r o Mrs. Cora Newton, Mrs. R. A. Aus tin, Flora Newton, Hazel Glldea, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Marshall. COUNTY W. C. T. U. The next county meeting will be held August 26 at Kingman Kolony. INSTITUTE HELD AT the new Union, with Necla Buck, I VALE TUESDAY state president in attendance. MISS FLORENCE RUSSELL Harvest season is upon us. Ripen ing grain reminds us th at fall is just around the corner. Edward Abbl opened the thrashing season Monday when he started combining at the Kllbum ranch. He was as sisted by Paul Kerr of Caldwell, Will Shurtz and Will Cumming are others from this district who have harvested their grain. Hugh Pearson, nephew of Ray and Clyde Cartwright, who has lived with Clyde the past year, is very ill with malaria fever at the Ray Cartwright home. His mother a r rived Sunday to visit him. Mr. Lemual King who has lpeen visiting with his son Joe King re turned to his home in the moun tains above Unity Thursday. Mrs. M. A. Bradney and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Russell and daughters were visitors in the Chas. Purdy home Tuesday evening. Zeb Wilson had the misfortune to have a horse kick him last Thurs day, breaking his leg. He is in the Holy Rosary hospital where he will have to remain six weeks. Tho ths doctor said it would be four month > before he could walk on it. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Sparks of Emmett visited at the parental El len Sparks home Saturday. Harry Russell assisted In the New Cash Grocery at Adrian on the op ening night. Mrs. M. A. Bradney spent from Sunday until Tuesday at the Ooe Schwelzer home on the Owyhee. Mr. and Mrs. Archie Howell and family of Nysas visited Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Russell. H-H CLUB NEWS Successful canners met for their regular meeting at the home of their leader Mrs. Joe King all mem bers were present. Games were played and refreshments served. The Sew and Sew Club was post poned last Thursday on account of Mr. Wilson's accident. They will meet this week. The Big Bend Bakers will start having meeting* again Wednesday July 25th at the home of Mrs. Harry Russell after an adjourn ment of eight weeks on account of Barbara Russell having whooping The third county meeting of the year was held in the Vale park, Tuesday, July 20, with County President Mrs. E. M. Carter of Har per presiding. There were about twenty present. Mrs. Perry, evangel istic director lead the morning de- votionals from the 8th Psalm. The regular business was taken up and all current m atter taken care of. The Harper unit headed the list with $48 on the Education Fund. Noontide prayer was by Rev. Perry. After a covered luncheon at noon a program was presented. Mrs. Perry sang a solo, "Rose of Shar on"; colored chalk drawing by Mrs. Rev. Hill of Vale, illustrating "Let the Lower Lights Be Burning;” Mrs. CCC FENCES LARGE AREA AT SQUAW BUTTE EXPERIMENT STATION Thirtysix miles of road and 86 miles of fence have been built on the new 16,000 acre Squaw Butte range experiment station in central Oregon. Thees and other improve ments have been made by a CCC camp established there. Some of the fences are coyote proof, while a few around small test plots even exclude rodents. All the fences are built with large peeled Juniper posts, Yielding Reverence To yield reverence to another, to which lasts almost indefinitely in hold ourselves and our lives at his that climate. disposal, is not slavery; often, it is the noblest state in which a man SELL IT OR BUY IT THROUGH can live in this world. A CLASSIFIED AD. Colonial Four-Poster Style BEDS In Walnut, Maple and Mahogany finishes Now is the time to refurnish that spare bedroom in either twin or a full size walnut four-poster beds. ONLY Outdoor appetites call for plenty of energy-giving bread. Our baked foods are fresh daily. $7.75 McClure Bros. Bakery Peterson Furniture Co. ONTARIO, OREGON Watch “Needless Expense” . . . when You Build . . . Plumbing and heating sys tems are often the cause of needless expense In home maintenance. Avoid this when you build. Insist on careful work and tested supplies. GEO. J. KINZER Plumber PHONE 134-J-t PARMA — GROWERS! Fall Lettuce We are now contracting FALL LETTUCE acreage. This must be planted not later (/ LOWEST COST FINANCING \/ESTABLISH BANK CREDIT U nder IM « «to n IW* k a r r .w a r »■ )»»*«■ aua Ib lrd a l llw n M of Ifca car k> w k (/Y O U MAKE A CASH DEAL o r b y Iba t r a d .-I n v a lú a .1 a a a tb a r than August 3rd autam abSa. TM » baa* .u p p N a a tba « s f t r r r aaadad la mofea gassIM a a •aafe daol. MOOMATI IM M IS I oa l / INSURANCE ora oil you o«/ Na Cxtra Cfeargaa. PLACED LOCALLY Our Fieldman Will Contact You and Those Interested Call •x Or Eld ridge Nyssa. Phone 45 F.H. HOGUE NYSSA, O REO O N OFFICE PHONE 17 Or Qrnny K. Hague Nyssa. Phone 4S ★ NYSSA BRANCH a THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF PORTLAND I M • E « f f O C t A l 'First National Bank West of the Rockies' 0 f f O S I T I NS UI ANC« C O I I O I A I I O H